5 Reasons You Can't Get a Mortgage

Are you gearing up to refinance or buy a home this year? These five things may stop your mortgage dead in its tracks. Here's what you need to know to prevent your loan application from being denied.

1. Your Credit Score Is Not What You Think It Is

This scenario is all too common. A consumer will get one credit score from a credit monitoring company and think that 720 score is exactly what the mortgage lender will use in conjunction with the loan application. But that's not how it works – instead, a mortgage lender pulls three credit scores, one from each credit bureau. The lender will use the middle credit score as a measure of risk.

Another credit issue is a disparity between scores from lender to lender. For example, you might have your credit score pulled the 20th of the month and it might be 720, you might have it pulled again on the 25th while reviewing another mortgage company and it might be 698. Why the discrepancy? Your credit card balances, for example, could definitely influence the difference in credit score in terms of when those balances on those accounts report to the bureaus and when the lender checks the score. To get a mortgage you'll need at least a 620 credit score — bar none, across the board.

So while it's important to keep on top of your credit scores, especially when you're preparing to buy a home, know that they can and do fluctuate, and that what a lender sees may differ somewhat from the scores you see. You can see two of your credit scores for free on Credit.com, and you can also estimate how much house you can afford before you set out on your search.

If your credit score is in the 620 range, and you're looking for a conventional loan, be prepared to make at least a 20% down payment, as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac heavily discriminate against low credit scores with low down payment loan options. The FHA is a much lower cost and more favorable choice in that type of scenario.

2. You Have a Job Gap Longer Than Six Months

Mortgage companies want to originate loans that perform over time. As such, proving continuous employment shows the lender you're a better credit risk. When you apply for a mortgage, a two-year employment history is required. If in the past two years you had a job gap longer than six months, that's a red flag unless you have a reasonable and logical explanation for the events that led to the gap. Your situation is trickier if, for example, you are working in one field, have a job gap for eight months and then return to work but enter into a different field.

If you have do not have a history of working in the same field and/or in the same role within your occupation, you could face roadblocks. If the job gap was due to an unforeseen, yet explainable — and documentable — circumstance, or a family-related event such as maternity leave or an illness, those types of instances hold more water. The key here is to have an explanation about the job gap. Give the facts, pure and simple, so your loan officer can go to bat for your loan approval.